Rethinking Reputation: How PR Trumps Marketing and Advertising in the New Media World

Rethinking Reputation: How PR Trumps Marketing and Advertising in the New Media World

by Fraser P. Seitel, John Doorley

Narrated by Sean Pratt

Unabridged — 7 hours, 25 minutes

Rethinking Reputation: How PR Trumps Marketing and Advertising in the New Media World

Rethinking Reputation: How PR Trumps Marketing and Advertising in the New Media World

by Fraser P. Seitel, John Doorley

Narrated by Sean Pratt

Unabridged — 7 hours, 25 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$27.88
FREE With a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime
$0.00

Free with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime

$29.98 Save 7% Current price is $27.88, Original price is $29.98. You Save 7%.
START FREE TRIAL

Already Subscribed? 

Sign in to Your BN.com Account


Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers

FREE

with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription

Or Pay $27.88 $29.98

Overview

Good public relations is no longer just icing-it's a strategic imperative more important to your competitive success than even advertising or marketing. This is true whether you're a century-old multibillion-dollar corporation or a penniless startup. In Rethinking Reputation, public relations guru Fraser Seitel and John Doorley, founder of the Academy for Communication Excellence and Leadership at Johnson & Johnson, examine a fascinating new set of case studies-including the BP oil spill and the launch of CitySlips-to glean the PR dos and don'ts for the new media world, covering both standard reputation maintenance and crisis management. They also show start-up companies and entrenched organizations how to use the power of word-of-mouth to jump-start business like never before. This is a wake-up call from two industry legends-for public relations professionals as well as entrepreneurs, CEOs, and anyone else tasked with representing their organization to the world. These new media lessons include: *Remember that research is cheaper, and more critical, than ever. *Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good-launch your idea before someone else does. *Don't get so excited about social media that you forget about traditional media. *In a crisis, you are never offstage. *Never lie, never whine, and never try to predict the future!

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

From BP’s oil spill to Anthony Weiner’s Twitpic snafu, public relations failures are all around us. How to avoid them? Public relations consultant Seitel (The Practice of Public Relations) and corporate communications expert Doorley demonstrate how people and companies have successfully used PR to accomplish great things or to destroy themselves, and how readers can learn to use this powerful force for good. Claiming grandiosely that “public relations is the most powerful force in modern society,” the authors examine success stories from Johnson & Johnson and others, and PR disasters, such as John Edwards’s affair, and how those reputations could have been protected. Some (though not enough) analysis is done on strategy: pick the high or low road and stick to it; plan soon and plan thoroughly. Since PR is globally replacing advertising as the “go to” promotional strategy for individuals and organizations, it’s undoubtedly important to understand. Unfortunately, this slim study pretty much stops at “PR is important”—a good start, but not fully developed. Agent: Andrew Wylie, Wylie Agency. (Aug.)

From the Publisher

“A useful resource for…PR, mass communications, and related fields…Recommended.” —Choice

“I would give it an 'A.' It should be required reading for every communications student and their instructors, and for every person involved in a business that may some day have a PR problem or use a PR firm. Put it on your must-read list.” —O'Dwyer's

“A fun and educational discussion of building and protecting a reputation by two leaders in the field of public relations… Lots of practical information for both building a business and living a life.” —Kirkus Reviews

“By now you know we're in the middle of a communications revolution with an explosion of new media channels to reach your audience directly and then have your ideas shared in social networks. But most organizations act as if we're still in the mainstream media era of big expensive campaigns. Rethinking Reputation shows you how to reset your concept of reputation and to navigate this new media world. Beautifully written with compelling real-word examples from companies large and small, Seitel and Doorley show you how to succeed.” —David Meerman Scott, bestselling author of The New Rules of Marketing and PR, now in over 25 languages from Bulgarian to Vietnamese

“In an age of public conversations, reputation maintenance is a daily practice, and your crisis management skills may be needed at any moment. Fraser Seitel and John Doorley's book Rethinking Reputation doesn't just shed light on PR best practices; it's a wake-up call and a must-read for all communications professionals today.” —Deirdre Breakenridge, CEO Pure Performance Communications and author of Social Media and Public Relations

Rethinking Reputation reminds us all of the importance of PR in the most ad-cluttered world we've ever lived in. I highly recommend it to business professionals everywhere. Two big likeable thumbs up!” —Dave Kerpen, New York Times bestselling author, Likeable Social Media and Likeable Business

“Personal reputations seem in tatters everywhere you look today. This entertaining guide to public relations shows how the world's 'second oldest profession" is the basis of our individual reputations and relationships.” —Helen Ostrowski, retired chairman and CEO, Porter Novelli

“If your Master of the Universe reputation is under threat, you must immediately read this essential guide to master any crisis--or better yet hire the wise gurus of reputation, Fraser Seitel and John Doorley. Crammed full of wisdom from other Masters' fall from grace.” —Robert Lenzner, Contributing Editor and Columnist, Forbes Media and bestselling author of The Great Getty

“Everyone knows that reputation is a bridge--and an illusion. Rethinking Reputation is a hands-on training book that drives away theoretic cobwebs and teaches you how to use modern PR to a variety of ends. You can give this book to your bosses, boards or other constituents to get buy-in for newthink, no-BS strategies---while saving you from pulling out your hair!” —Richard Laermer, CEO RLMpr and author of Full Frontal PR

“Whether in business or politics, one's reputation is the critical foundation on which success is built. Seitel and Doorley have put forward a thought-provoking blueprint on how to both build and maintain this valuable asset.” —Ed Ingle, Managing Director of Government Affairs, Microsoft Corporation, and former senior White House aide

“The authors are good storytellers, with tales of the famous and the obscure. They are especially good at conveying the power of character-based communication.” —Rudy Giuliani, former mayor of New York City

CEO Pure Performance Communications and author of Deirdre Breakenridge


In an age of public conversations, reputation maintenance is a daily practice, and your crisis management skills may be needed at any moment. Fraser Seitel and John Doorley's book Rethinking Reputation doesn't just shed light on PR best practices; it's a wake-up call and a must-read for all communications professionals today.

Kirkus Reviews

A fun and educational discussion of building and protecting a reputation by two leaders in the field of public relations. Seitel (The Practice of Public Relations, 11th Edition, 2010) and Doorley (co-author: Reputation Management: The Key to Successful Public Relations and Corporate Communication, 2006), the founding academic director of the Public Relations master's program at NYU, assemble a set of case studies from the fields of business, politics and sports, and they separate their view of public relations from advertising and marketing. "Public relations," they write, "is mandatory; advertising optional." The authors show how it is now possible to build a successful international business in a short time without advertising. Susie Levitt and Katie Shea, student designers of CitySlips footwear, achieved this through networking among family and friends and using their Facebook and Twitter accounts to organize and expand their outreach. Other cases showcase the relationship between branding and reputation and how qualities of character, such as integrity, impact the performance of both business corporations and individuals. An example is Roy Vagelos, who developed a cure for river blindness and who, when he was made an executive at Merck, ensured the drug was made available where needed for free. The authors contrast Exxon's disastrous response to the Valdez oil spill with the different types of blunders made by BP's leadership during the Deepwater Horizon disaster, and they profile figures in sports and politics who have required PR help, including Kobe Bryant, Michael Vick, Bill Clinton and Anthony Weiner. Seitel and Doorley also highlight the integrity of Clinton's former press secretary Mike McCurry, and they use Paul Volcker's example of public service to derive their own Volker rule: "never spin." Lots of practical information for both building a business and living a life.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940171331283
Publisher: Ascent Audio
Publication date: 11/27/2012
Edition description: Unabridged
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews